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| How it Started | |||||||||||||||
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| In 1982, Andrew King
bought 82, Colston Street in order to house some of the many co-operatives
springing up across Bristol. The first tenants were the independent bookshop
Greenleaf, still a tenant to this day and one of the few independent bookshops
still thriving, and Safer World, the research and campaign group on armaments
now well established in Central London. The building was to offer its tenants reasonable rents, a benign and supportive landlord, a secure and welcoming place from which to work and the chance to share premises and resources with a range of like-minded organisations. Andrew was to gain from a secure investment that produced a financial return as well as generating a strong social benefit. Andrew went on to buy a further three buildings in Colston Street. The wide variety of tenants supported by Andrew's investment has made Colston Street well known for its unique and colourful character. Jamie Hartzell began working with Andrew when they together bought 84, Colston Street in 1986. Jamie moved to London and bought 1A Waterlow Road, North London in 1994. Here began in one small room the Islington Zairean Refugee Group, the alternative news video Undercurrents, now well established in Oxford, and Squall, the newspaper of the homelessness movement. In 1996, with the help of Triodos Bank, the premises were expanded and now house 12 campaign groups or charities working on environment, development, refugee, human rights and alternative finance issues. The premises provide flexible office space, communal facilities such as fax machines, a meeting room and a café run by the Local Exchange Trading Scheme. In 1998, after several years of research and development, Andrew and Jamie decided to form The Ethical Property Company PLC and the London and Bristol properties were transferred into the Company. With the help of Triodos Bank and Malcolm Lynch Solicitors, a share issue was launched in May 1999. This closed in December 1999, having raised £1.72 million. The company invested these funds in setting up seven new centres in Bristol, London, Leeds and Oxford. With the funds from the second share issue, new centres were set up in London, Sheffield, Brighton, & Manchester, taking the total number of centres to 12. |
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The Ethical Property Company, The
Old Music Hall, 106-108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JE |